The Flag of Grenada was embraced on February 7, 1974, after the nation acquired its freedom from the Unified Realm, and supplanted a more seasoned flag that had been utilised in Grenada beginning around 1967. Antony C. George, a famous Grenadian craftsman, is credited with the planning of the flag. The flag is perceived as a hallowed and official insignia of Grenada, with the nation having official manners followed during its raising and bringing down.
2. The Flag of Grenada was embraced on February 7, 1974, after the nation acquired its
freedom from the Unified Realm, and supplanted a more seasoned flag that had been
utilised in Grenada beginning around 1967. Antony C. George, a famous Grenadian
craftsman, is credited with the planning of the flag. The flag is perceived as a hallowed
and official insignia of Grenada, with the nation having official manners followed during
its raising and bringing down.
3. History of the Grenada Flag
The main flag of Grenada was an English Blue Ensign, taken in 1875. The flag of Grenada in the upper left corner
consisted of a blue floor with Association Jack and an identification on the right corner. The identification shows
the labourers in a sugarcane plant. In 1903, the identification was changed. In the new identification there was a
boat adrift and mountains and sky not too far off behind the boat.
In 1967 Grenada turned into an English partnered state and was taken on another flag. The acknowledged flag
consisted of three level stripes, blue-yellow-green. In the flag was a white circle with a red edge and a carnation in
the circle. At the point when Grenada acquired full freedom in 1974, a totally new flag was embraced. The new
flag consisted of four triangles, two yellow and two green, a thick red edge and six brilliant stars on this edge.
Simultaneously, with a coconut image on the left, a red plate in the middle and a brilliant star in the circle. This
flag has kept on fluctuating up to the current day unaltered on the domain of Grenada.
4. Colours and the Importance of the Grenada Flag
The Flag of Grenada is made out of four triangles, two of which are yellow (above and underneath) and
two of them are green, encompassed by a square shape partitioned in red. There are seven yellow five-
pointed stars on the flag. Three of them are in the red strip over the flag, three in the red strip at the lower
part of the flag, and one in the circle set in the flag. Likewise, there is a little coconut image in the triangle
in the raised piece of the flag.
Every one of the stars on the flag addresses the managerial locales of the country. The red shade of the
flag addresses boldness and imperativeness. Gold tone addresses insight and temperature. The green
addresses the nation's vegetation and horticulture.
5. Economy of Grenada
Horticulture and the travel industry are the main areas of the economy, despite the fact that they are turning out to be more
vital for fish and agronomically based enterprises. Grenada depends on monetary help from the Assembled Realm and
different sources to support the economy.
To a more noteworthy degree than in most West Indian islands, Grenada's arable land is separated into little possessions
on which labourer owners develop enhanced crops. Due to these little properties and the for the most part sloping territory,
mechanical ploughing is interesting. The major rural product crops — cocoa, bananas, nutmeg, and mace — in the past
were constrained by helpful affiliations, yet these affiliations have started to go under more noteworthy government control.
Bananas rely on particular terms given by the Assembled Realm and are impacted by the strategies of the European
Association. Commodities of mace and lime juice give significant profit. Copra and, progressively, different items handled
from the coconut are likewise traded, and a wide assortment of tropical natural products — mangoes, energy natural
products, guavas, tamarind, and citrus organic products — are developed. The public authority has energised expanded
creation of staple vegetables, like peas, tomatoes, yams, pumpkins, and corn (maize). The island's woods yield generally
teak and mahogany, and the public authority has attempted to overhaul fishing.